the gravitational pull
sun's gravity pulls earth and earth pulls on the moon.
No. The gravity that comes from the Sun pulls us towards the Sun. The gravity that comes from Earth pulls us towards Earth.
gravity
Gravity
The sun's gravity - just as it pulls everything else in our solar system into orbit around itself.
inertia pulls Earth strait while gravity pulls the earth toward the sun which make earth rotate around the sun for example: http://s1107.photobucket.com/albums/h387/Colista1234/?action=view&current=sun-1.jpg
The Sun's gravity pulls on: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Gravity is a force that pulls the planets or a force to push. Gravity is on the Earth, gravity is floated in space. So the Sun's gravity keeps the planets to orbit the Sun.
The Earth is big enough to make its own gravity, so we get stuck to it when we are born. The Sun's gravity pulls on the Earth, but Earth is in a stable orbit, so it goes around the sun instead of falling into it. Neither the Earth's gravity or the Sun's gravity pulls on us so hard that we can't move or do normal things. The Moon's gravity also pulls on the Earth, but it is less strong, so it doesn't pull us up... it only creates the tides, affecting the water.
The mutual force of gravitational attraction between the Earth and Sun.
Earth orbits the sun due to the force of gravity. Gravity is the attraction between two objects with mass, and the sun's gravity pulls Earth towards it, causing Earth to move in a circular path around the sun.
The Earth pulls on the Moon, and the Moon pulls on the Earth. The Sun pulls on the Moon, and the Moon pulls on the Sun. Mars pulls on the Moon (ever so slightly) and the Moon pulls on Mars. Your body pulls on the Moon (hardly measurable, but it does) and the Moon pulls on your body. The Moon and Sun and Earth's gravity pull (and push) Earth's oceans, and the ocean "tides" are the results.
gravity